Chris Cocuzzo

874 posts

Chris Cocuzzo

Chris Cocuzzo

@chriscocuzzo

Insurance operator and builder. Technology fanatic. Running Irving RIsk: https://t.co/mBy2bbwoii

New York, NY Katılım Nisan 2007
399 Takip Edilen384 Takipçiler
Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@wshaw_9 Nice job! One quick itty bitty thing: guessing that top link should say something different?
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Will Shaw
Will Shaw@wshaw_9·
Over the last ~ 4 weeks, with the help of a buddy, we completely rebuilt our website for Lighthouse Capital Group using ONLY A.I. Specifically Claude, and Claude cowork and code. Was able to plug in all the tools we needed, and manage from Claude. Just awesome, check it out! lhcapitalgroup.com
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@devongovett And by the way, it's ok that people want to use CLI-like tools (even if in UI elements). But I agree with you: it's something that I never adjusted to using in Superhuman. I know Notion users love the slash command as well, but that tool is another example of this behavior.
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Devon Govett
Devon Govett@devongovett·
Another case of programmers making all UIs into a terminal. Command palettes are a huge UI cop-out. I hate apps that have commands that are only available in these things. Most people will never discover them. That’s why we invented menus and buttons. Design actual UI!
Nic Barker@nicbarkeragain

I'm completely convinced at this point that the "Command Palette" is a fundamental UI concept, and should be in all applications. It should also be a built in browser concept, there should be an API for websites to push items to the command palette ("new post", "muted words" etc)

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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@kepano @pitnikola Saw this yesterday and muted the accounts immediately. Nonsense posting. Thanks for confirming that!
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kepano
kepano@kepano·
@pitnikola I have no idea where this number came from. It's completely made up, and as you said doesn't matter since we don't have investors and don't plan to sell.
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@nbaschez I think your best bet is not reviewing AI-created plan with AI. Instead, tell it to clarify, ask, etc. as much as possible to create the plan beyond your initial draft.
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Nathan Baschez
Nathan Baschez@nbaschez·
My biggest challenge with vibe coding / agentic engineering lately has been getting stuck in what I call a "plan doom loop" - have AI write a plan - review myself, seems good - have AI review plan, it always finds something - repeat It drains my time and energy to determine how important the "findings" really are Who has solved this
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@kaleighf Well said. I just listened to a podcast - last night and then again early this morning - talking about "taste" as an intrinsic human trait, but increasingly disrupted by AI. So, I wrote out my own view on taste and why it matters in this AI era. open.substack.com/pub/theteardow…
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Kaleigh Moore
Kaleigh Moore@kaleighf·
Things that make us most interesting, empathetic, and unique as human beings are the experiences and emotions that are the textures of our individuality. Let’s not forget that as we all have fun playing with AI. It doesn’t have those components.
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Danielle Morrill
Danielle Morrill@DanielleMorrill·
my cofounder and I did a live code review today and I gave Claude Code the transcript. It also has all the reviews he has ever given our code base, all his comments, and I am using it to make my own coding coach so I can produce better code quality and keep regressions to minimum
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@louispereira One thing that stands out: in Cursor, you watch as the code changes to some degree. In Claude Code, a CLI-based endless scroll trains you to zone out.
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Louis Pereira
Louis Pereira@louispereira·
coming from the NoCode world, I much prefer Cursor to Claude Code and it’s not even close
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@jasonfried @ryancarson @pmarca Thank you. The flood of literal-interpreted takes is already overwhelming. They are: (1) people that say that don't introspect and agree, and (2) opposite. That people reflect on their purpose, motivation, interests, and etc. is normal. Widespread.
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Jason Fried
Jason Fried@jasonfried·
@ryancarson @pmarca Introspection has little to do with therapy or looking backwards. Don’t get boxed in by that narrow interpretation.
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Ryan Carson
Ryan Carson@ryancarson·
I watched this interview, and what struck me the most was that @pmarca said he has zero interest in introspection in his life. I feel the same but have always felt bad about it. I don't have the patience or interest in any sort of introspection on the past. I don't want to talk to a therapist. I don't want to write in a journal. It was interesting to see that Marc feels the same way. Made me feel less bad about it. Great interview @davidsenra.
David Senra@davidsenra

In our conversation Marc Andreessen makes the case that the beating heart of our civilization’s progress is the founder: “You’re much more likely to build something important in the 21st century if you start with a founder and train them in management than if you start with a manager and try to train them to be a founder.”

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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@kaleighf Question: have you moved some of that yapping off these networks and into semi-small group chats? Maybe 10-15 people in WhatApp/similar.
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Kaleigh Moore
Kaleigh Moore@kaleighf·
I remember when I used to come on Twitter to ask a Q or share a musing and then spend the next few hours eagerly replying, having real conversations with people where did this magic gooooo where are we *actually* yapping these days
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@kaleighf Twitter still has some of the old magic. Substack - as much as I like it for writing - feels overrun with coach/writing/career/system-for-life influencers. Also the "how to grow Substack" people. And most annoying posts start with: "I don't know who needs to hear this"
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@eastdakota Rephrase to "broad LLM target AI"? Google Search just worked. Forever. It still does. I think that people argue the wrong point when they say "Google Search is a monopoly" AI is not just what competes against Google and Gemini and every other tool in that space.
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Matthew Prince 🌥
Matthew Prince 🌥@eastdakota·
We cannot have a fair market for AI when Google leverages their search monopoly to see 3.2x as much of the web as OpenAI, 4.8x as much as Microsoft, and more than 6x as much as nearly everyone else. Most data wins in AI. Google needs to play by the same rules as everyone else.
Cloudflare@Cloudflare

Google's dual-purpose crawler creates an unfair #AI advantage. To protect publishers and foster competition, the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority must mandate crawler separation for search and AI. cfl.re/4t84kPz

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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@alexisxrivas Correct me if wrong: value goes up -> more options with your equity. Not saying majority of folks but it's a concept people use to their advantage, agree?
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Alexis Rivas
Alexis Rivas@alexisxrivas·
1) Tanking the housing market is a bad idea. The last crash wiped out builders and financing and slowed new home construction for nearly a decade. That gap is a major reason we’re short millions of homes today. 2) Land price ≠ home price. You can make homes more affordable by building with more density. In many places, that raises land value for existing homeowners while lowering per unit costs for new buyers of new homes. 3) People feel wealthier because the value goes up, but that number only matters if you exit the market. For most homeowners, home values going up does not improve day to day living standards. 4) Lowering inflation helps. It stabilizes input costs so more projects pencil and more homes get built. 5) Lowering rates results in prices going up in markets with regulatory constraints (like California), and little improvement to supply.
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter

BREAKING: President Trump says he wants to "drive housing prices up for people who own their homes." "For people that own their homes, we are going to keep them wealthy," Trump says.

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klöss
klöss@kloss_xyz·
the best 18 accounts to follow in AI: @karpathy = ex-Tesla AI, teaches LLMs @steipete = built Clawdbot @gregisenberg = startup ideas daily @rileybrown = vibecode god @corbin_braun = cursor + Ares @jackfriks = solo apps, real numbers @EXM7777 = AI ops + systems @eptwts = prompts + algo hacks @levelsio = ships games, no VC @AlexFinn = Claude Code maxi @BrettFromDJ = design + AI @godofprompt = prompt guides @AmirMushich = AI ads + video @gizakdag = viral AI art styles @MengTo = landing pages via AI @KingBootoshi = vibecoding king @meta_alchemist = Claude vibing @kloss_xyz = systems architecture follow them all, and learn from them who’s missing from this list? I’ll add em
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Jason Fried
Jason Fried@jasonfried·
My 11 year old really wants to check out the Sphere in Vegas. Is The Wizard of Oz a worthwhile ticket to get the full experience?
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@jasonfried My favorite Porsche thing I learned recently: the ignition on the left to make cars faster to start during races. Details matter!
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Jason Fried
Jason Fried@jasonfried·
Like most car pedals, the Porsche 928 clutch petal has grippy rubber tread. But back in the late 70s they just had more fun. They didn't have to embed "928" into the tread itself, but, then again, maybe they did. When you're that deep into a project, pride pops out all over the place. Are any mass production car brands having this kind of fun anymore?
Jason Fried tweet mediaJason Fried tweet media
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Sar Haribhakti
Sar Haribhakti@sarthakgh·
@lulumeservey yep he’s dangerous because he’s both excellent communicator and utterly stupid
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Chris Cocuzzo
Chris Cocuzzo@chriscocuzzo·
@jasonfried Long-time follower/user of 37S stuff! Couldn't figure out how to move the categories (Maybe, Done, Etc.) around in an OCD-pleasing order. Do they stay where they are or can you move the card categories (and associated cards) around the UI?
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Jason Fried
Jason Fried@jasonfried·
"...what I noticed within seconds of trying Fizzy was the absence of overwhelming menus, buried options, and integrations I never asked for. At the same time, I was struck by the presence of a distinctive design and sense of whimsy that’s largely faded from the greater software universe." JR Raphael at @FastCompany dives deep into Fizzy, touches high points, soft spots, and everything in between. An honest and thorough review of the product, our philosophy in general, and the boring state of business software. Great detail in this piece. Nicely done. Thanks JR! fastcompany.com/91470191/fizzy…
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Danielle Morrill
Danielle Morrill@DanielleMorrill·
I’m headed to my parent’s house for the weekend and I have resolved not to comment on or throw out any of their expired food
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